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Show Page A4 Thursday, April 1 7, 1 986 Park Record I mm& mm off ec mm SATURDAY, APRIL 26, 1 986 9:00 A.M. PROSPECTOR $6.00- Preregistration (includes T-shirt) ATHLETIC CLUB $4- Day of Race (no shirt) AT PROSPECTOR SQUARE HOTEL Trophies and Awards to Top 3 Finishers Drawings Galore WIN A HOT AIR BALLOON RIDE FOR TWO Course begins at Wolfes at Holiday Village Shopping Mall in Park City and ends at Prospector Athletic Club Call 649-6670 for more information t I I I I NAME OFFICIAL ENTRY FORM: (Includes entry fee payable to PROSPECTOR ATHLETIC CLUB) Mail to: Prospector Athletic Club, P.O. Box 1698, Park City, UT 84060 ATTN: Jeannine Sex Age ADDRESS: I I I SHIRT SIZE:. I S M L XL (circle one, 1 00 cotton) I E Waiver: In consideration of this entry, I waive any and all claims for myself and my heirs against officials and I I sponsors of the Spring Run Off for injury or illness which may directly or indirectly result from my participation. I I Signatures Parent (if under 1 8);. m Rental Property Owners j We have applicants waiting to rent Roommates need 3-bedroom condo, near lifts, unfurnished, year lease Woman & children want 3-bedroom, unfurn., garage, yard Prospector employee needs 3 bedroom home, unfurn., year lease Single lady looking for small condo, prefers Snyderville, long term Woman with two kids, needs inexpensive house or condo, year lease Can we help fill your vacancy? Please call Gary Sneed today 649-S100 9,T t if i . H it m ..: T Mm 1 riil r-; ! J7 j SPRING CONDO CLEARANCE! If you've been waiting for prices to drop after the ski season - wait no longer. This Copperbottom Inn Condominium features one bedroom, two baths, top floor location with vaulted ceiling and great views of the ski mountains. Amenities include: spa, sauna, on site office. Offered furnished for just r ir c rr lim Lea, Broker 649-5100 (800) 245-6417 I 700 Park Ave.. Suite 2006 Park City (Above Jan's in the Mt. Air Mall) IDENTITY PROPERTIES REAL ESTATE, INC. ESjd.idw? bv Itiek Urolith Here's the real scoop on Carmel's restrictive laws It's not every small resort town that has a movie star for a mayor. But that's not the real story behind Clint Eastwood being elected chief executive of Carmel, Calif. The real story is about Carmel itself. Eastwood ran for office, you may recall, because he said the town was too conservative about development. How conservaive was the town? You should be glad you live in Park City! For instance, Frisbee playing was banned in the city park! Why is Frisbee throwing such a dangerous activity? activi-ty? Will players running after the discs run into traffic? Will the Frisbees attain deadly velocities in the air? Will they be mistaken for UFOs and induce panic among the peaceful townsfolk? Another case: You need city permission to cut down trees, and each one is carefully catalogued. Not only that, but Whaddyaknow has learned that they're given pet names. Recently, a home owner asked for permission to cut down two tall trees in his front yard. A city planner replied in consternation, "Oh, no! Not Ernie and Edith!" But Carmel's most controversial rule is about ice cream cones. Eating ice cream on the street is not prohibited, pro-hibited, but it is strongly discouraged. Whaddyaknow interviewed city council member Wal-ly Wal-ly Snelgrove about the ice cream situation. "We strongly believe in avoiding foods that are fattening, like ice cream. If you want to see the effects of excessive ice cream, just look at cows, where it comes from. Cows are slow-moving, stupid-looking and they leave messes all over the place." "We think we have a system to effectively curb ice cream use. In fact, we studied your liquor system in Utah before we created it," said Snelgrove. First, the town has an Ice Cream Control Commission. The committee is made up mostly of diabetics. "Who better to regulate the distribution of ice cream?" Snelgrove asked. The local government regulates the sale through city-controlled ice cream stores. When you take ice cream into a restaurant, you have two choices. First, you can take in a normal-sized carton car-ton of ice cream. These come in three sizes 3 gallons, 5 gallons and 7 gallons. You have to consume the complete carton on the premises, or leave it behind when you leave. Snelgrove says there is a good reason to keep visitors from taking opened ice-cream cartons in a car. "When it melts, it gets the dashboard and the upholstey all gooey." If you don't want to take cartons that big into an eating place, you can buy a mini-carton, which is only 1 gallon. These special cartons have a high-cholesterol content. When fed to laboratory rats, this ice cream caused the rodents to swell up and burst within seconds. In normal cases, customers will keep their ice cream with them, at room temperature, throughout their meal. You may ask the restaurant to store your ice cream in the freezer until you want it, but this service is a $5 charge. Over the years, liberals in Carmel have advocated serving ser-ving ice cream by the scoop, but so far the change has been resisted. Some restaurants have ice cream licenses don't have to bring your own. However, you ' certain rules in the process. ' musUbe Say you want an ice-cream cone. Fire, waitress to your table and tell her what kind of want sugared or plain. She will g0 to the kit h0ney bring back your cone. "ei1 anj Then you must go to the freezer, get a scoo cream and bring it back to your table. ic Next, maybe you want something to carry the ice cream? After all, it gets messy if you have?M your hand or a strong napkin. 0 How about an ice-cream scooper, then'' Rest aren't allowed to have them, but you can obtain'11"'115 taking a four-week course, obtaining an oDerT5 license from the city and buying one from your n city ice cream outlet for $70. "We found that im!?' scooper operations accounted for 90 percent of all accidents," said Snelgrove. In many places, the ice cream freezers are local , across the streets from the restaurant. What hapMns warm days when customers must cross the street w! their ice cream? "We usually end up charging them e tra because now they have a milk shake," he said Naturally, we wondered if these rules caused frustn tion in the Carmel public. "Not at all," said Snelgrow "Oh, I'm going back for another Scotch. Want one''" Eastwood's election has outraged Park City Mayor Hal Taylor, who said that HE is the first cowboy ma'vtt in the West. Taylor said that Eastwood stole his act However, sources say Taylor is trying to make his in age more macho to match Eastwood's. Last week, win the mayor ordered a pastry in the Main Street Deli, was overheard to say, "Go ahead. Make my Danish." Whatever happened to Park City covergirls Alana art Leilani Soares? Alana, you may recall, was featured in; Playboy cover spread. Then the magazine did an article on sisters of Playmates, and Leilani joined Alana in a collection of photos. What next? Would you believe the sisters are in fc Cheech and Chong video cassette "Get Outta M; Room"? The cassette is C and C's spoof of video albums The Soares sisters appear in the last video in the pit gram, "Born in East L.A." They appear for only a sf cond, cuddled around Cheech in the front seat ol I Chevy. (You'll have to use the freeze-frame capabilii; on your VCR.) It's interesting to note that while they aren't sec much, they're the topic of an entire scene between Ik comics. The premise is that Cheech, the producerdire tor of the video album, is outrageously over budget, to horny Chong has spent even more money by hiring te twins. Their mother will work on the set too, he explains, and "They need the money cause they're underage." f w w w I ' i&ipfilke si Vein HS22 hy Teri Gomes Paper chase Life's little bits and pieces need organization Part of the problem is that this has been aptly named the "information generation," so-called because of all the facts and knowledge available to so many at just the punch of a computer key. But part of the problem is hereditary; my mother has always been a paper packer, too. On Saturday, we had some people over and in an effort to quickly pick up, we scooped all the piles of papers I had all over my room into one huge box and hid the box for the day. On Sunday, however, I needed a note I had written about a terrific story lead someone had given to me last week and was forced to dig through the box. It was like looking instantly at the last six months of my life. Like most reporters, I do nothing with these papers, except cut them out and put them in various piles to be dealt with at some later date. I looked over the stories I had meant to copy and send on to the principals involved. involv-ed. Good intentions, but... I must have pulled a dozen notebooks of various sizes out of that box. These should never fall into the wrong hands. Besides the strange form of not-quite-shorthand I have developed over the years, there are also little dangerous, incriminating notes in the margins. These notes are written by well-respected members of the community and myself when stuck in an incredibly dull meetings. These notes represent acute boredom and could be interpreted in-terpreted as disrespectful of various city and county leaders who often run aforementioned meetings that are tough to sit out. Some notes are written to other journalists as we Ques tion, "How much longer can this meetine eo?" Or "T'll get up and leave if you will;" or, "The guy's guilty as hell what's taking the judge so long to decide? ' ' Notebooks are one thing, at least all those pages are bound by something and in one place. But sometimes tips come in strange places and a nice, blank notebook isn't at my disposal. That was the problem with the tip I got last week. A solid-gold source called me on the phone and started giving me names and places like I had my steno in hand. So I grabbed the back of an envelop started scribbling away with a magic marker I sa the kitchen counter. Now, I couldn't find the envelope. t I found several to-do lists. These include Mhdolr., things like pick up clothes at the cleaners anflB ' lesson, along with work-related things like, cnecK w Coalville for latest lawsuit and call school sourw year-round information. ' . I have a hard time ever completing a list. so. f off the things I did get done and then I put the ua i of papers to finish it later. Invariably, I stand and forget where I put the old one. ;S This is not entirely my fault. I've la W those great little sticky-back notes and I nna u ) f me around better. I can stick a note to my or on the dashboard of my car or even on my w when I'm done, I stick the little sticky notes other paper in some pile. LSnaoeis s5- T alsn Hkf tn r n things QUI 01 " - (o0 magazines that I might later want to act on. are a rather eclectic bunch of things. ,tjngCOn. Sunday, yielded a pig sweatshirt ad, a v , form, a look I liked for the dining n ,(f in the Columbia Journalism Review that have a local connection. ,urn forte There were bills to be paid, letters tor fill out and send back, and all kinds of n? and press releases. Underneath it all ;th fho lint tin nm.u.cul . in So I sorted and filed ana pui vr- dealt with later. And it struck a vein w things never change. The new piles are a,w table respectfully waiting upon and in the meantime I nav e dontheL can't really make out my own shortnai eij, tv,o wTHnrpmemberitas'16 Vllt CllVClUpC, L A me time... , rQie I think I'll call those people wno u.b f life- see if they can come over and orga'v 1 'board write myself a note and stick it on trie & iff income Tax erV1Ces see PROFESSIONALS |